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Shugendō 修験道 Path to Mystic Powers
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En no Gyōja 役行者 Father of Shugendō
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Path to Mystic Power Via Ascetic Practices Merger of Mountain Worship, Shamanism, Shintōism, Taoism, & Buddhism This is a Side Page. Return to Sect Index.
NOTE: This page relies heavily on the research and assistance of Dr. Gaynor Sekimori of the Centre for the Study of Japanese Religions, School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London. She is also a visiting professor at Kokugakuin University (Tokyo, Japan). She has authored and translated numerous books and articles on Japan's Shugendō religious traditions.
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Shugendō (also spelled Shugendo) can be loosely translated as "path of training to achieve spiritual powers." Shugendō is an important Kami-Buddha combinatory sect that blends pre-Buddhist mountain worship, Kannabi Shinkō 神奈備信仰 (the idea that mountains are the home of the dead and of agricultural spirits), shamanistic beliefs, animism, ascetic practices, Chinese Yin-Yang mysticism and Taoist magic, and the rituals and spells of Esoteric (Tantric) Buddhism in the hope of achieving magical skills, medical powers, and long life. Practitioners are called Shugenja 修験者 or Shugyōsha 修行者 or Keza 験者 (those who have accumulated power) and Yamabushi 山伏 (those who lie down in the mountain). These various terms are typically translated into English as ascetic monk or mountain priest.
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